Breaking news from your editors at Fast Company, with updates all day.

Babbel Hits Android. Babbel is already a successful language learning tool on iPhones and iPads, claiming 5 million users learning in over 200 countries, and it’s just announced it’s hitting Android devices now as a free app. It will also arrive as an e-book soon to complement its web app and smartphone apps. –KE

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–Updated 12:30 p.m. EST

HBO, MLB, and Comcast Come to Xbox. Microsoft continued the adoption of entertainment to its online service Xbox Live with the North American launch of several apps today–HBO Go, MLB.TV, and Comcast Xfinity TV. These are just the latest entertainment apps–joining the likes of Hulu, ESPN, FiOS, and more. Microsoft also took the time to announce some benchmarks for entertainment on Xbox Live:
• Globally, total hours spent on Xbox Live have grown 30% year over year (includes online gaming and entertainment).
• Entertainment app usage more than doubled year over year.
• Zune Video Marketplace is the world’s 2nd largest transactional video service.
• Gold members in the U.S. spend an average of 84 hours a month on Xbox Live.
• Entertainment usage has now surpassed multiplayer games usage.
— KO
—Updated 10:54 a.m. EST

Pottermore Starts Selling Harry Potter E-books. For just about $8 you can download any of the seven Harry Potter tomes from Pottermore.com, that’s finally open for business. The books can be downloaded from Amazon for the Kindle, Google Play, Sony, and Barnes and Noble for the Nook reader. Audiobooks have also gone on sale, at $29.99 each. —NS

–Updated 8:18 a.m. EST

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Nelson Mandela Archive Goes Online. Google’s Culture Institute has added another trove of documents to its digital library. The new website, containing archival documents, photos and videos connected to Nelson Mandela’s life, was assembled with help from the Nelson Mandela Centre For Memory in Johannesburg. —NS

Google To Take On Facebook With Commenting Platform. Google is planning a web-wide commenting system that will take onFacebook’s omnipresent “Comment” boxes, TheNextWeb has heard. The system will be integrated into third-party sites, and comments will be fed into Google’s search index to be archived. With such a social bent, it looks like Google+ will play a key role in this rollout as well. —NS

LulzSec Hacks Military Dating Website. LulzSec, associated with hacking group Anonymous, is still up to tricks after its leader and members were arrested earlier this month. In its latest attack, the group fessed up to hacking the Military Singles dating website, and has released passwords and user information of more than 170,000 members. —NS

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Zuck’s Harvard Emails Suggest Ceglia’s Facebook Claim Was Faked. Facebook‘s lawyers have unearthed Mark Zuckerberg‘s emails from Harvard’s servers, dating back to a week before he launched Facebook, in a bid to dismiss Paul Ceglia’s claims to 50% of the company. While the records showed that Zuckerberg and Ceglia were working together on a system called StreetFax, Facebook said there was no record of the emails Ceglia produced to back his Facebook claim, which could imply those were faked. —NS